Born 4
Born 4 is the second album from Canadian group Jakalope. It was released in Japan on June 7, and was released on October 3 in Canada. The first single from the album, "Upside Down (And I Fall)", was released with an accompanying video. It was noted that the video had left behind the theme of cloning that was used in the videos from It Dreams. The second single from the album is "Digging Deep", the video for which apparently returned to the themes of its predecessors from It Dreams.
Born 4 | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 7, 2006 (Japan) October 3, 2006 (Canada) | |||
Genre | Pop rock, industrial | |||
Length | 50:07 | |||
Label | Orange | |||
Producer | Dave Ogilvie, Trent Reznor | |||
Jakalope chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic |
Trent Reznor co-produces, and the album includes guests such as Allie Sheldan (Rio Bent), Thom D'arcy of Small Sins, Bob Pantella (Monster Magnet), Alex Lifeson (Rush), Jeremy Fisher and Bill Rieflin (Ministry, R.E.M., Married to Music).
Track listing
- "Anthem 2" – 2:37
- "Instigator" – 3:55
- "Upside Down" – 3:39
- "Throw It Away" – 3:03
- "Code 4 Love" – 3:03
- "Forecast 42" – 3:07
- "Intervention" – 3:36
- "Digging Deep" – 3:22
- "Star 24 (No Apologies)" – 3:00
- "Get It Back" – 3:12
- "Unsaid" (duet with Jeremy Fisher) – 3:23
- "Something New" – 3:10
- "Buried" (Japanese bonus track) – 5:05
- "Pretty Life" (The Respirator Remix) (Japanese bonus track) – 6:31
gollark: The anarchocommunist-or-whatever idea of everyone magically working together for the common good and planning everything perfectly and whatnot also sounds nice but is unachievable.
gollark: I mean, theoretically there are some upsides with central planning, like not having the various problems with dealing with externalities and tragedies of the commons (how do you pluralize that) and competition-y issues of our decentralized market systems, but it also... doesn't actually work very well.
gollark: I do, but that isn't really what "communism" is as much as a nice thing people say it would do.
gollark: I don't consider it even a particularly admirable goal. At least not the centrally planned version (people seem to disagree a lot on the definitions).
gollark: I don't think that makes much sense either honestly. I mean, the whole point of... political systems... is that they organize people in some way. If they don't work on people in ways you could probably point out very easily theoretically, they are not very good.
References
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